The Point-in-Time (PIT) Count provides a snapshof the number and characteristics of persons whare homeless on a single nightThe Housing Inventory Count (HIC) reports the number of beds and units dedicated to serving homeless personsCoCs should work to coordinate the HIC and the PIT count and complete both counts on the samenight
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The number of sheltered persons reported in the PIT should equal the number of persons in ES, TH, and SH reported on the HIC
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Sheltered countPersons living in privately or publicly operated congregate shelters, transitional housing, hotels and motels paid for by charitable organizations or government agencies, and Safe Havens
Unsheltered countPersons with a primary nighttime residence that is a public place not typically used as a regular sleeping accommodation for humans
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Report the total number of sheltered and unsheltered persons and households for three household types:
Households with at least
one adult and one child
Households without children
Households with only children
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Households with at least one adult and one child
Sheltered
ES TH
Unsheltered
Total number of households
Total number of persons
Number of persons (under age 18)
Number of persons (age 18-24)
Number of persons (over age 24)
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Households without children Sheltered
ES TH SH
Unsheltered
Total number of households
Total number of persons
Number of persons (age 18-24)
Number of persons (over age 24)
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Households with only children Sheltered
ES TH
Unsheltered
Total number of households
Total number of one-childhouseholdsTotal number of multi-childhouseholds
Number of children in multi-child households
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Subpopulation Type Required for Sheltered Persons
Required for Unsheltered
Persons
Chronically Homeless IndividualsChronically Homeless FamiliesAll VeteransFemale VeteransSeverely Mentally IllChronic Substance AbusePersons with HIV/AIDSVictims of Domestic Violence optional optional
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Count youth in emergency shelters and transitional housing programs
Make sure to include all programs on CoC’s housing inventory count (HIC)Temporary emergency hotel/motel vouchers for homeless peopleFaith-based providers and DV providersRunaway and Homeless Youth (RHY) provider programs
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Collect data using:HMIS
Need alternative approach for including programs that don’t participate in HMIS
Provider report or surveyClient-level survey using standardized instrument
Can use a combination of approaches, but remember to de-duplicate!
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Data quality
Uses universal and program-specific HMIS data elements, as established by HUD
Make sure information is gathered or extrapolated for each provider
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Street count plus interviewsComplete coverage (block-by-block) and/or known locationsProbability sampling
Service-based count with interviews at non-shelter locations
Interview all clients at non-shelter services (i.e. soup kitchens, healthcare centers)Include outreach teams
Combination of street count and service-based count
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Engage youth shelters and service organizations in planning process
Partner with organizations that provide services to homeless youth to conduct thecount
Utilize incentives to engage youth in count process
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Identify known locations where youth congregate prior to the night designated for the PIT count
Consider engaging currently or formerly homeless youth help identify locationsRecruit expert volunteers such as law enforcement officials and social service staff to help identify locations
Utilize incentives to engage youth
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Publicize the PIT count in the communityDesign and hang posters in areas where youth congregate publicizing the count date
Hold trainings for staff and volunteers to ensure they understand who to count and how to use the survey instrument
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The term “youth” is broad, so planning a youth count requires thinking about the people you want to include, and the consequences thereofWe’ll look at:
What subgroups are included in “youth”? Should a count try to include them all? If not, what are the priorities?How do the subgroups you’re after influence where to look and who to get to help?What do you want to know about “youth” in addition to being able to complete the HUD tables?
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The term “youth” covers a multitude of potentially quite different people
Street youth—those who don’t use either youth or adult shelters; any ageYouth using RHY programs, most likely ages 12-17Youth using adult shelters, ages 17 (for moms) to 24
Subset: Moms with kids, most likely in adult family shelters
Unaccompanied youth in schoolJustice-involved youth—in or just out of detention, re-entering from jail or prison
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Also populations defined by personal characteristics, overlapping and intersecting with location characteristics
Age—usually 12-24, from young teens to young adultsSubgroups based on genderMembers of racial/ethnic minoritiesGLBT youth
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Where to look for street kidsObviously, on the street, but which streets, and where else?Issues for many street kids include the nexus of drugs, sex trade, HIV and other STD risk, and violence, so can use this information to target search locations
Clinics, treatment programs, law enforcement
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Who can help you find them—similar youth?For locations, where kids congregateFor best times to search in the different locationsFor advice on composition of search teams—include a youth? Include or exclude police? Include an outreach worker familiar with that location?For direct contacts with youth in particular locationsFor best approach strategies
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Who else can help you find them?Street outreach workers from clinics, RHY programs, other homeless programsStaff of youth drop-in/multi-service centersHIV/AIDS and other STD clinics, primary care clinics, addictions recovery programsPossibly jails, probation/parole officers, for those with arrest histories, law enforcement personnel
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Where to look for RHY Program UsersObviously, in RHY programs, if we’re talking about PIT counts.It might also be interesting to get feedback from other parts of the youth population as to whether they ever used, use, or think of using an RHY program
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Where to look for them?Family emergency sheltersTransitional housing programsDomestic violence programsMaternity group homes
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Who can help you find them?Shelter staffPossibly child welfare staff, if family has an open CPS caseTANF and other mainstream agencies that provide benefitsAlso will be some young women in single adult shelters whose children are in foster care, where the issue is reunification
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Where to look for them?Through the school system and homeless education coordinatorsCaution is needed with respect to homeless definitions:
Unaccompanied youth stably housed with relatives while their parents are homeless are not homeless by HUD definitionsStreet youth, if they are in school, are not likely to make themselves known to the coordinators
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Who can help you find them?Homeless education coordinators in particular schoolsAt the entire school district level, the district’s homeless education coordinator
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Since the age range of youth goes up to 24, young adults in or leaving justice system institutions are a potential subpopulation because they run a high risk of homelessness upon release, or may have been homeless before incarcerationWhere to find them?
For PIT—in juvenile detention, jail awaiting trial, or other CJS facilities (for HUD homeless definition, have to pay attention to length of incarceration and time to release)
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Who can help you find them?Law enforcementProbation/parole officersRe-entry-focused support and transitional residential programs
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Age—what breakouts are meaningful—HUD’s 0-17, 18-24, may not help you too much. What does your CoC need to know to plan programs?Refer to Core Data Elements (CDEs) in Matt Morton’s presentation for last week’s Webinar. Also
Does youth have a home to go back to, or notPrecipitating factors—the CDEs will definitely help; also, if you’re going to all the trouble of finding and interviewing youth, might as well ask them some questions about other important stuff
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To get a better sense of the dynamics of youth subgroups, use interviews to gather data about overlaps. For all subgroups, ask
Use CDEs to learn their demographic and other personal characteristics. Then examine similarities and differences among the groups found in different venues.Which different venues have they used/inhabited?
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New York City, Los Angeles, and some other very large CoCs use block sampling strategies for their PITs—is this possible for youth?
Identifying certainty and noncertainty blocks is hard enough for regular PIT, how possible for youth?
Areas of high concentration or whole CoC?My understanding of homeless youth, especially street youth, is that they tend to concentrate in relatively few areas of a CoC. If this is true for yours, should you concentrate your search efforts in these areas—i.e., go only to certainty sites?
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Respondent-based sampling, sometimes called “snowball” sampling, is a technique for reaching people with pretty rare characteristics, who would not be well-represented with normal household or other common sampling techniques.
Injection drug users, people with HIV/AIDSSome have tried for homeless youth (e.g., Baltimore)
How it works—connections, time framesWould it be useful for a youth count?
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You’re committed to doing the best youth count you can—for many of you, to improving on efforts in earlier years.Your thoughts and comments on your priorities, techniques, decisions, points of focus would be good to hear during this session.See RHYTTAC website for last week’s webinar that included information on CDEs
Webinars & resourcesOther RHYTTAC Youth Count! Webinars www.rhyttac.netNational Alliance to End Homelessness http://www.endhomelessness.org/pages/youthcount) Family and Youth Services Bureau/ACYF/HHS: http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/fysb/resource-library
HUD PIT guidance: http://hudhre.info/index.cfm?do=viewResource&ResourceID=4697National Center on Homeless Education guidance on Federal Data Collection for Homeless Youth: http://center.serve.org/nche/ibt/sc_data.php